Centre, earth; I. iii. 85. Chafe thee, become angry; IV. v. 260. Chance, chances it; III. i. 137. Changeful, inconstant; IV. iv. 97. Change of, exchange for; III. iii. 27. Chapmen, buyers; IV. i. 75. Characterless, unrecorded; III. ii. 192. Characters, figures; I. iii. 325. Charge, expense; IV. i. 57. 66 on c.," on compulsion, by your order; IV. iv. 133. Charon, the ferryman who rowed the souls of the departed over the river Styx; III. ii. 10. Circumstance, details of argument; III. iii. 114. Clamours, noises, sounds; I. i. 92. Cliff, clef or key; a musical term; V. ii. II. Clotpoles, blockheads; II. i. 122. Cloud; "a c. in autumn," a cloud heralding bad weather; I. ii. 131. Co-act, act, play together; V. ii. 118. Cobloaf, a crusty, uneven loaf with a round top to it (Malone conj. "Coploaf”) II. i. 40. Cogging, cheating, deceiving; V. vi. II. Cognition, perception; V. ii. 63. Colossus-wise, like a Colossus; V. v. 9. Compare, comparison; III. ii. 179. com Conduce, is joined, brought together (Rowe, mence"); V. ii. 147. Conjure; "I cannot c.," I cannot raise up spirits; V. ii. 125. Constringed, contracted, cramped; V. ii. 173. Convince, convict, prove guilty; II. ii. 130. Convive we, we will feast; IV. V. 272. Convoy, conveyance; I. i. 107. Coped, encountered; I. ii. 34. Core, ulcer; II. i. 7. 66 Cormorant, ravenous (Folio 1, cormorant "); II. ii. 6. Corse, corpse, body; II. iii. 35. Counters, round pieces of metal used in counting; II. ii. 28. Cousin, niece (a title given to any kinsman and kinswoman); I. ii. 44. Creep in, steal secretly into; III. iii. 134. Critics, censurers, carpers; V. ii. 131. Crownets, coronets; Prol. 6. Crushed into, pressed into, mixed with (Warburton, "crusted into "); I. ii. 23. Cunning, powerful; III. ii. 136. Curious, causing care; III. ii. 67. Deceptious, delusive; V. ii. 123. Decline, run through in detail; II. iii. 55. fall; IV. v. 189. Declined, fallen; IV. v. 189. Deem, thought; IV. iv. 59. Deject, dejected; II. ii. 50. Depravation, detraction; V. ii. 132. Deputation, power deputed to thee; I. iii. 152. Deracinate, uproot; I. iii. 99. Derive, deduce logically; II. iii. 63. Destiny, fate [“labouring for destiny" = "the viceregent of Fate (Malone)]; IV. v. 184. Dexter, right; IV. v. 128. Diana's waiting-women, i.e. the stars; V. ii. 91. Diminutives, insignificant things; V. i. 34. Distains, stains, taints; I. iii. 241. Distaste, dislike; II. ii. 66. make distasteful; II. ii. 123. Distasted, made distasteful; IV. iv. 48. Distraction, despair, madness; V. ii. 41. Dividable, divided; I. iii. 105. Double-henned; "perhaps, with a double hen, i.e. with a female married to two cocks, and thus false to both " (Schmidt); V. vii. 11. Draught-oxen, oxen used to draw a cart or plough (Folios, "draft-oxen"); II. i. 111. Drave, urged on; III. iii. 190. Dress'd, addressed, prepared; I. iii. 166. Dwells, depends on; I. iii. 336. Edge, sword; V. v. 24. Eld, old age (Quarto, "elders"; Folios, "old"); II. 66 ii. 104. Elements; the two moist e.," i.e. water and air; I. iii. 41. Embracement, embracing; IV. v. 148. Embrasures, embraces; IV. iv. 37. Emulation, envy, jealousy; II. ii. 212. Emulous, envious (Folios I, 2, "emulations"; Folios 3, 4, "emulatious"); II. iii. 75. Encounterers, people who meet others half-way; IV. v. 58. End, kill, destroy; I. ii. 79. Engine, instrument: II. iii. 137. Enginer, pioneer; II. iii. 8. Enter, to enter; II. iii. 189. Entreat, treat; IV. iv. 113. invite; IV. v. 274. Envy, malice; III. ii. 99. Errant, deviating; I. iii. 9. Errors, deceptions; V. iii. III. Exact; "grace exact"; v. Note; I. iii. 180. Exasperate = exasperated; V. i. 30. Excitements, incitements; I. iii. 182. Exclaim, outcry; V. iii. 91. Execute, practise, use; V. vii. 6. Execution, working; I. iii. 210. Expect, expectation; I. iii. 70. Expectance = expectation; IV. v. 146. Expressure, expression; III. iii. 204. Five-finger-tied, tied with all the fingers of the hand; V. ii. 157. Fixture, stability; I. iii. 101. Flat tamed, stale, insipid; IV. i. 62. Fled, have fled (Pope, "get"; Capell, "flee"; Keightley conj. "have fled "); I. iii. 51. Flexure, bending (Folios, "flight"); II. iii. 109. Flood, ocean, sea; I. i. 105. "in f.," in full flow; I. iii. 300. Flow to, hasten towards (Johnson conj. "show too"); V. ii. 41. Fonder, more foolish; I. i. 10. For, against; I. ii. 281. because; V. iii. 21. Force, power, might; IV. i. 18. stuff; II. iii. 224. Forced, stuffed; V. i. 60. Forthright, straight path; III. iii. 158. Fraction, discord; II. iii. 101. Fraughtage, freight, cargo; Prol. 13. Frayed with, frightened by (Quarto, Folios, fraid "); III. ii. 32. Free, generous, noble-minded; IV. v. 139. Friend, befriend, favour; I. ii. 79. Frighting, frightening; V. iv. 34. Frush, bruise, batter; V. vi. 29. Fulfilling, filling full; Prol. 18. Full; in the f.," in full company, all together; IV. v. 272. Fusty, mouldy; I. iii. 161. Gaging, engaging, binding; V. i. 42. Gait, walk; IV. v. 14. Gallantry, gallants; III. i. 135. Gear, matter, affair; I. i. 6. Generals, collective qualities; I. iii. 180. Genius, the spirit supposed to direct the actions of man; IV. iv. 50. Glozed, used mere words; II. ii. 165. God-a-mercy, used in the sense of Gramercy, many thanks; V. iv. 33. Goose of Winchester, strumpet (the houses of ill-fame in London were under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Win 1- ༔ chester; the annexed engraving, from Aggas's map in Guildhall, represents the locality-in Southwark-where these houses were situated); V. x. 55. Gored, hurt, wounded; III. iii. 228. Gorget, throat armour; I. iii. 174. From a specimen in the Londesborough collection. Gracious, holy; II. ii. 125. Grated, ground; III. ii. 192. Great morning, broad day; IV. iii. I. Greekish, Greek; III. iii. 211. ; "all the G. ears," i.e. the ears of all the Greeks; I. iii. 67. Grossness, bulk; I. iii. 325. Hair, grain; "against the h." = against the grain; I. ii. 28. Hale, drag; IV. v. 6. Hamstring, tendon of the kneejoint; I. iii. 154. Hardiment, hardihood; IV. v. 28. Hare, timid (Folios, "hard"); II. ii. 48. 66 Collier, "edge"); III. iii. Him, himself; I. ii. 287. His='s; "Mars his idiot = Hold, regard as, look upon as; II. iii. 191. Holding, keeping (Quarto, "keeping"); II. ii. 52. Honesty, chastity; I. ii. 284. Hot, rash; V. iii. 16. However, although; I. iii. 322. Hoy-day, an exclamation; V. i. 69. Hulks, large, heavy ships (Folios, "bulkes"); II. iii. 267. Humorous, capricious; II. iii. 132. Humours, caprices; I. ii. 23. Hung, made linger; IV. v. 188. Hurricano, water-spout; V. ii. 172. Hurt, do harm; V. iii. 20. Husbandry, thrift; I. ii. 7. Hyperion, the sun-god, Phoebus Apollo; II. iii. 199. |